Posts Tagged ‘pierre koffman’

The End Of Haute Cuisine?

Cast your minds back, back into the mists of time when sauces had extravagant rococo names such as bordelaise, soubise or genevoise, vegetables were turned more times than a model on a catwalk and vegetarianism was a dirty word. That, dear reader, was the grand age of la Cuisine Franà§aise. Since then, French cuisine has undergone a lot of soul-searching – perhaps not by the French themselves, but certainly by others in the industry.

The tragedy of Bernard Loiseau’s suicide in 2003 (after learning he was to lose a Michelin star; in the end he kept it, albeit too late for poor M. Loiseau) caused many to question the efforts and money taken to reach the starry heights of Michelin recognition – are customers really driven to a restaurant because of the number of stars they have attained? Once upon a time, the answer was almost certainly yes, but M. Loiseau’s tragic suicide resulted in many chefs both in France and here, including Nico Ladenis and Marco Pierre White, handing them back to Michelin, stating the stars no longer recognised kitchen skill, but rather then number of hand towels in the toilets and so on.

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Red, White & Blue

Newsflash: Invader alert. No, not giant marauding crayfish but chefs from across both ponds seeking to set up camp on our shores. At first there was the creep of French-style bistros and the odd diner, perfectly attuned to our slightly more straitened circumstances, but now the oven gloves are off and it’s war.

It’s as if the gods have descended from some culinary Olympus on high to show us how to do it all over again. In the red, white and blue corner of La Belle France we have Bruno Loubet, last seen fleeing to Australia on the last ship out and now back to set up shop at The Zetter; Pierre Koffman, whom you may remember seemed surgically attached to Selfridges roof last summer and now keen to tackle the black hole that is the Berkeley Hotel and even Joà«l Antunes is bringing his Brasserie Joà«l to Westminster. And let’s not forget the behemoth that is Alain Ducasse, hell-bent on covering the planet in Ducasse-lets. In the – um – other red, white and blue corner of the USA, look out for Daniel Boulud and his infamous burgers, April Bloomfield of Spotted Pig fame and even the whiz kids behind New York funk-spot Manhattan are taking over Covent Garden with Balthazar. It’s hard to keep track and this is just the vanguard. Read full post

Go Dine With Them

It’s ironic, really. One moment it’s all rumours and hushed whispering and being-in-the-know, the next you can barely move for the latest pop-up restaurant (near you for a mere 6 months or until boredom sets in) or ‘underground dining’ (so numerous now your neighbours are probably doing it). So is the ‘pop-up’ phenomenon here to stay?

Restaurateurs are certainly hoping not. Amazingly Theo Randall of InterContinental was on dear old Auntie recently declaiming loudly against pop-ups on the curious basis that – in his view – diners are far better off eating at established restaurants because they are assured of knowing where ingredients come from, guaranteed better service and – wait for it – value for money. Really, Theo? Really? Read full post

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